Visual Storytelling: Designing for European Masterpieces

 

Have you ever wondered what goes on behind-the-scenes when designing for a major exhibition ― specifically ‘European Masterpieces from The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York’ at the Gallery of Modern Art. 

Every exhibition starts with the artwork ― in this case 65 superb paintings spanning 500 years ― that offer a breath-taking journey from the 1420s and the emerging Renaissance to conclude at the height of early twentieth century post-impressionism in the 1920s.

LIST OF WORKS: Discover all the artworks

DELVE DEEPER: More about the artists and exhibition

THE STUDIO: Artworks come to life

WATCH: The Met Curators highlight their favourite works

Visual storytelling

Designing an exhibition at QAGOMA is a multidisciplinary process that combines staff from many departments with a variety of skills, such as curation, exhibition design, graphic design, web and motion graphics, workshop, registration and conservation teams, the installation crew, and finally lighting, all coming together where collaboration is the key to success.

Visual storytelling underpins the display to create a meaningful and memorable experience for our audience. The challenge with ‘European Masterpieces’ was to display works over 500 years, moving smoothly through art movements from the fifteenth to twentieth centuries. The starting point for an overall design strategy was the GOMA building itself, enabling the design team to take a contemporary approach in contrast to the historic setting where the artworks are on permanent display in their home at The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

The aim was to source and profile an architectural motif consistent over 500 years that could be applied both in an historical application yet with a modern twist. The arch offered such an opportunity to be adapted to accommodate the three distinct exhibition themes to create an unforgettable journey through the history of European art.

Among a variety of design strategies to create an exhibition, exhibition designers combine a range of colour and intensity, a variety of materials and decoration, the construction of physical and visual pathways including transition zones, and ambient lighting to create just the right mood. The arch and its variations was accompanied with a carefully considered changing colour palette for each theme transitioning from dark to light and similarly with lighting tones.

The arch ― in part inspired by The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s architecture, and historical prompts from the artworks themselves  ― is repeated with subtle differences throughout the three chapter themes ‘Devotion and Renaissance’, ‘Absolutism and Enlightenment’, and finally ‘Revolution and Art for the People’. 

The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Great Hall / © The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

The arch: Variations of scale, form and detail

The chapter themes have been used to divide the exhibition into three main curatorial groupings, and the arch, varying in scale and detail was a recurring design element throughout these different time periods ― Renaissance, Baroque and ending with the Modern. This connecting architectural element throughout these themes reduces in scale as you progress through time, playing with form to give prompts to the artistic period on display.

Exhibition entrance

Adopting the forced perspective techniques used in Renaissance architecture, a series of repeated arches decreasing in size and spacing, and a contemporary response to ‘candlelit’ alcoves, greet you at the exhibition entrance. An anteroom at the end of the corridor creates a moment to pause before entering the exhibition.

Design concept for the exhibition entrance

The exhibition entrance to ‘European Masterpieces’ / Photographs: Natasha Harth and Chloe Callistemon © QAGOMA

Devotion and Renaissance

Light levels start low and focused within ‘Devotion and Renaissance’ to become brighter as you navigate the exhibition. Combined with low height walls, colours of cool blue-grey and cool grey are complemented with warm ambient lighting. A light sandstone grey is used to accent the inside of the arch, a contrast against the cool walls.

A single jack-chain curtain is the decorative feature overhead, with arched cut-outs it suspends to help create a solemn space for contemplation, reflecting the past grandeur of the church. To achieve the desired effect for the overhead highlight, both exhibition design and workshop went through an extensive testing and prototyping process, ruling out string, rope, plastic, and opting for a custom metal chain curtain pre-fabricated by the workshop team.

Once the suspend arch feature was confirmed, arch openings were scaled and positioned to consider the placement of lighting tracks in relation to the position of artworks to ensure that the chain curtains wouldn’t cast shadows on artworks.

Design concept for ‘Devotion and Renaissance’
Testing string, rope, plastic, and metal chain for the curtain feature in ‘Devotion and Renaissance’ / Photograph: Grace Liu © QAGOMA

Testing the lighting track to position artworks / Photograph: Grace Liu © QAGOMA
The chain curtain featured in ‘Devotion and Renaissance’ being prefabricated in Workshop / Photograph: Grace Liu © QAGOMA
Construction of ‘Devotion and Renaissance’, the first chapter theme in ‘European Masterpieces’ / Photograph: Lee Wilkes © QAGOMA

Chain curtain decorative feature within ‘Devotion and Renaissance’ / Photographs: Joe Ruckli and Lee Wilkes © QAGOMA

Transition zone

The transition zone between ‘Devotion and Renaissance’ and ‘Absolutism and Enlightenment’ of suspended pendant lighting, mirrors, checkered flooring, and archways placed within an elongated hallway sets the scene for what is to come next, allowing the visitor to pause before they encounter the next change of colour palette, an increase in the wall scale and a change to the arch form.

Design concept for the transition zone
The transition zone between ‘Devotion and Renaissance’ and ‘Absolutism and Enlightenment’ / Photograph: Joe Ruckli © QAGOMA

Absolutism and Enlightenment

Colour was introduced in ‘Absolutism and Enlightenment’ for dramatic appeal, creating a rich and vibrant luxury with the deeper wall hues, to give the second chapter a burst of drama through a bolder colour palette. Walls of crimson-red compliment the rich gold ornate frames and draws on the tones found in several of the artworks, a deep teal-green was used as an accent to contrast with the red and build on the exhibition palette.

Design concept for Absolutism and Enlightenment

The second chapter theme ‘Absolutism and Enlightenment’ / Photographs: Joe Ruckli © QAGOMA

Revolution and Art for the People

The last exhibition chapter theme ‘Revolution and Art for the People’ had a playful approach to the arch, interspersed in the meandering pathways. The light pastel palette layered on the walls as a base colour of soft grey, plus the spearmint and fresh light blue provided a foil for the bright bold matching tones inside of the arch of deep green and deep blue. The mix of pastel and bolder accents throughout the space created visual interest and movement, with the addition of pale and deep ochre as a contract against the cooler tones to complete the exhibition palette.

These key exhibition design elements transition us from Renaissance altarpieces and chapels of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries when Christian traditions of devotion underscored one of the most dynamic periods of creative and intellectual growth in human history, through to the Italian Baroque, Dutch Golden Age, French Rococo and Neoclassical movements, to end with the emergence of the Modern era, when the radical notion of the creatively independent artist took hold.

Elliott Murray, Senior Digital Marketing Officer, QAGOMA spoke with Grace Liu, QAGOMA Exhibition Designer and lead designer on ‘European Masterpieces’

Design concept for ‘Revolution and Art for the People’

‘Revolution and Art for the People’, the final chapter of ‘European Masterpieces’ / Photographs: Natasha Harth © QAGOMA

This Australian-exclusive exhibition was at the Gallery of Modern Art from 12 June until 17 October 2021 and organised by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, in collaboration with the Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art and Art Exhibitions Australia.

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Wattle: From the illustrations of May Gibbs to Ellis Rowan’s watercolours

 

National Wattle Day was first celebrated in New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia on 1 September 1910, then in Western Australia and Queensland in 1912. Wattle had become a symbol of Australian national identity from Federation — becoming one nation — the Commonwealth of Australia, on 1 January 1901. Branches of wattle then featured in the Commonwealth Coat of Arms from 1912 and from 1914 during the First World War wattle sprigs and wattle badges (illustrated) were sold as a patriotic symbol to raise money for the troops overseas and later for women and children’s charities. The golden blossoms, found throughout the continent, even inspired Australia’s choice of green and gold for national sporting teams.

‘Wattle Day’ badges

‘Wattle Day’ badges c.1914 / Courtesy: Museums Victoria

Over time, the date was changed for each state to coincide with the best flowering of their local wattles, with Queensland celebrating in July, however in 1992 the first day of spring for the Southern Hemisphere was proclaimed as Australia’s National Wattle Day.

‘The Queenslander’ celebrates the wattle, 1910

‘Young girl in the midst of wattle blossoms’ / Supplement to The Queenslander December 1910 / 208289 / Courtesy: John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland, Brisbane

Brisbane Wattle Day Celebrations, 1914

Daphne Mayo (dressed as a wattle maid, centre foreground) participating in Wattle Day celebrations in Brisbane, 1914 / Mayo was awarded the Wattle Day travelling art fellowship in 1914, provided by the Queensland Wattle League / Courtesy: John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland, Brisbane

The wattle became a unique preoccupation in the early Twentieth Century for many artists, being a creative inspiration and for events and exhibitions through the Wattle League, with Daphne Mayo (1895–1982) receiving a Wattle Day travelling art fellowship in 1914 while at college (illustrated) provided by the Queensland branch. Mayo was the first recipient of the scholarship from the Queensland Wattle Day League formed in 1912. Illustrator and accomplished botanical artist May Gibbs (1877-1969) was best known for her Gumnut Babies and the Snugglepot and Cuddlepie children’s picture books, however she also created Wattle Babies (illustrated) — ‘cute little rays of sunshine’. Marian Ellis Rowan (1848–1922) is also know for her exquisite botanical watercolours of Australian flora, of which our focus here will be her wattle illustrations.

DELVE DEEPER: Discover more fascinating Queensland Stories

RELATED: Wattle

May Gibbs Wattle babies book illustrations

May Gibbs, Australia 1877-1969 / Wattle Babies c.1918 / Watercolour, pen and ink / Courtesy: State Library of New South Wales

Ellis Rowan botanical studies

Marian Ellis Rowan’s watercolours of Queensland tropical flowers and foliage were among her most spectacular and accomplished works and she achieved international significance largely through the botanical studies she produced in the state.

Although not presented in the standard format of botanical illustration with cut away floral sections and detailed leaf studies, her watercolours of plants and flowers are very readily identifiable. Ellis Rowan (1848–1922) known by her middle name, entered into a detailed correspondence with Ferdinand von Mueller (1825–96), the Director of the Melbourne Botanic Gardens, to identify the subject of her paintings. Preferring to work en plein air, many depict the animals and insects associated with them in the natural world. Rowan is now widely recognised as elevating what was regarded as a standard ladies form of decorative painting at the turn of the twentieth century to a more significant artistic level.

The Gallery does not possess an example of Rowan’s wattle studies, however the Queensland Museum has her Queensland watercolours and these document the important influence Queensland had on Rowan’s career over multiple individual visits in 1891, 1892, 1911, 1912 and 1913. In 1912, she exhibited her Queensland paintings in Brisbane and persuaded the state government to buy 125 flower paintings which are now in the Museum’s collection. The Museum through Judith McKay has also published on Rowan — A Flower-Hunter in Queensland (1990).

Ellis Rowan ‘Brisbane Golden Wattle’

Ellis Rowan 1848-1922 / Brisbane Golden Wattle c.1911 / Watercolour and gouache on paper / Collection: Queensland Museum

Ellis Rowan ‘Acacia’

Ellis Rowan 1848-1922 / Acacia c.1911 / Watercolour and gouache on paper / Collection: Queensland Museum

Delve into more works by Ellis Rowan

Cunningham wattle plate

The Royal Worcester Porcelain Works has from its founding years enjoyed great renown for its production of decorated porcelain. In the late nineteenth century the firm achieved distinction for its naturalistic portrayal of groups of highland cattle in misty landscapes, and studies of flowers and fruit.

In the early 1900s, Flavelle Brothers, well-known Sydney jewellers, commissioned a series of designs by Rowan — one being this wattle design — which were then reproduced on Royal Worcester porcelain by well known china painters in the decorating department at the factory in England such as Reginald Austin, Harold Martin, A Shuck and JW Sedgley.

The earlier pieces produced for the Australian market were notable for their prominent ‘Quaker grey’ borders but as these examples proved expensive to retail they were later replaced with a more simple transfer-printed border. This example bears the printed border and is of special interest to Queensland as it was made for the Brisbane branch of Flavelle, Roberts and Sankey whose premises were in Queen Street.

Ellis Rowan ‘Cunningham wattle plate’

Royal Worcester Porcelain Works, Manufacturer, England 1862-2009 / Ellis Rowan, Decorator, Australia 1848-1922 / Cunningham wattle plate 1926 / Porcelain, bone china with transfer printing and overglaze colours / 1.8 x 18cm (diam.) / Gift of Philip Bacon AM through the Queensland Art Gallery Foundation 2011 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art

Ellis Rowan ‘Eugenia’

Eugenia c.1891 is an unidentified Eugenia species (now classified as Syzygium or in common appellation lilly pilly) which is native to Queensland. It belongs to a group of more artistically inclined watercolours as it shows the botanical specimen against a landscape setting of the area where the plant was to be found.

Ellis Rowan, Australia 1848–1922 / Eugenia c.1891 / Watercolour and gouache on paper / 52 x 36cm / Purchased 2011 with funds from Roger and Marjorie Morton through the Queensland Art Gallery Foundation / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art

Ellis Rowan

Photograph of Ellis Rowan published in The lone hand 1 October 1910, p.461 / 114501 / Courtesy: State Library of Queensland

Ellis Rowan had an upper middle-class education, including some tuition in watercolour painting, although she later claimed, with characteristic exaggeration, to have been entirely self-taught. She went on to become one of Australia’s most famous and accomplished natural history artists.

She began to exhibit her large watercolours of native flowers and plants at about the time of her marriage to Captain Frederic Charles Rowan in 1873, mainly at intercolonial and international exhibitions, however she also exhibited in India, England, Europe and the USA and published a number of articles and books, including A Flower Hunter in Queensland and New Zealand (1898). Rowan won ten gold, fifteen silver and four bronze medals, starting with a bronze at Melbourne’s second Intercolonial Exhibition in 1872 and ending with gold at the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893.

John Longstaff’s memorial portrait

John Longstaff’s skills as a portraitist were eagerly sought, he was a five-time winner of the Archibald Prize for portraiture. His painting Memorial portrait of Mrs Ellis Rowan, taken from a photograph (illustrated), was paid for by public subscription after Rowan’s death, the first national portrait of an Australian woman. Interestingly, Longstaff replaced the roses in the reference photograph for Wattle in his painting.

Edited curatorial extracts, research and supplementary material sourced and compiled by Elliott Murray, Senior Digital Marketing Officer, QAGOMA

John Longstaff ‘Memorial portrait of Mrs Ellis Rowan’

John Longstaff, Australia 1861-1941 / Memorial portrait of Mrs Ellis Rowan, flower painter and authoress 1926 / oil on canvas / 148 x 101cm / Collection: National Library of Australia / Plaque on frame reads: Memorial portrait of Mrs Ellis Rowan flower painter and authoress painted by Sir John Longstaff (from a photograph) subscribed for by the people of Australia

Featured image detail: Ellis Rowan Brisbane Golden Wattle c.1911
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Go back in time to Brisbane’s Randall Art Gallery

 

Richard John Randall (1869-1906) was a Brisbane based artist known for his watercolours and paintings of Australian landscapes. After studying abroad from 1891 and exhibiting at the Royal Academy of Arts in London, he returned to Brisbane in 1899 and established his own residence and art studio at Cordelia Street in South Brisbane. He also took an active role in local clubs and societies and was the Royal Queensland Art Society vice-president from 1903 until his death aged 37.

RELATED: The Golden Book of Gifts

Richard John Randall

In December 1892 Richard John Randall was accepted into the Herkomer School run by Professor Hubert von Herkomer at Bushey, Hertfordshire, north of London c 1892 / Courtesy: Trove, National Library Australia

In 1893 the South Brisbane Town Council occupied the corner site at 472 Stanley Street, and in 1897 the complex became the South Brisbane Municipal Library and Technical College, also known as the South Brisbane School of Arts. When in 1909 the Council was persuaded to accept 600 of Randall’s artworks in perpetual trust after his death, it converted the library on the first floor into an art gallery, with the Randall Art Gallery opening in 1914.

Interior Randall Art Gallery

Interior views of the Randall Art Gallery c.1914 / Courtesy: Trove, National Library Australia
South Brisbane Town Hall incorporating the Randall Art Gallery c.1924 / 4826 / Courtesy: John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland, Brisbane

In 1925 the Brisbane City Council took over the structure including the Collection and eventually it was transferred to be displayed on the fifth floor of the Brisbane City Hall after the building was completed in 1930. More works were added through gifts and purchases when the City Hall Arts and Historical Committee became responsible for development of the art collection, now housed in the Museum of Brisbane located on the top floor of the City Hall.

The Randall Art Gallery, ‘A Treasure House of Beauty’ was much loved at the time, with an enthusiastic outpouring in the Queensland Figaro in 1926 ‘The Randall Art Gallery is one of Brisbane’s most beautiful possessions, and a gem of loveliness which her citizens should be proud to possess and love.’ Lost but not forgotten.

Research and supplementary material compiled by Elliott Murray, Senior Digital Marketing Officer, QAGOMA

Featured image: South Brisbane Town Hall incorporating the Randall Art Gallery c.1914 / 4826 / Courtesy: John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland, Brisbane
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National Wattle Day: A celebration of a floral emblem

 

In 1988, the year of Australia’s bicentenary, the Golden Wattle (Acacia pycnantha) was officially gazetted as Australia’s national floral emblem, enjoying a popular acceptance as the national flower long before then.

We’ve been celebrating the Wattle for different reasons over the last century, and in 2020 for the first time, Brisbane is lighting up in yellow to celebrate National Wattle Day, however, it wasn’t until 1 September 1992 that our National Day has been celebrated together in all of Australia’s States and Territories, before then, it was recognised on different days between July (in Queensland) and October depending on its peak flowering season.

So, with the start of the Australian spring on the first of September, wear a sprig of the flowers and leaves to celebrate the day with us. Alternatively, you could go all out and decorate your car in blooms as they did in Brisbane a century ago.

Selling sprigs of Wattle Flowers, 1914

Raising funds for organisations such as the Red Cross during First World War by selling sprigs of wattle on Wattle Day, Courier Building, Brisbane / The Queenslander Pictorial, supplement to The Queenslander, 1 August, 1914 / Photograph courtesy: John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland, Brisbane

Wattle Day Procession, 1917

The Queenslander Pictorial, supplement to The Queenslander, 21 July, 1917 / Photograph courtesy: John Oxley Library, State Library of Queensland, Brisbane

Vida Lahey ‘Wattle in a yellow vase’

Vida Lahey, Australia 1882-1968 / Wattle in a yellow vase c.1912-15 / Oil on canvas on plywood / 24 x 29cm / Gift of the Estate of Shirley Lahey through the Queensland Art Gallery Foundation 2012 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © QAGOMA

Vida Lahey (1882-1968) is one of Queensland’s best loved artists, establishing her national profile with her modernist paintings of flowers in the 1920s and 30s.

Australian floral subjects have been popular since the 1890s, and after Australia attained nationhood through the federation of its six states in 1901, sentiments of national pride, and patriotism soon developed with the Wattle a favourite floral subject and emblem of Australia.

In Lahey’s lifetime, the Wattle flower was a favourite subject, with the Wattle Day League founded in Sydney in 1909, and a Queensland branch of the Wattle Day League established in 1912 by Mrs Josephine Papi. Her husband, Ferdinand, was an associate of the Queensland Art Society, of which Lahey was a member, and it is possible that Lahey contributed Wattle in a yellow vase c.1912-15 to a promotional event at the time, which is one of Lahey’s earliest flower studies.

DELVE DEEPER: Discover more fascinating Queensland Stories

RELATED: Wattle

Daphne Mayo and Vida Lahey

Daphne Mayo (left) and Vida Lahey (middle) c.1940s / Daphne Mayo Collection, UQFL119 / Courtesy: The University of Queensland, Brisbane

Besides Vida Lahey’s link to the Wattle Day League in Brisbane with her painting Wattle in a yellow vase, her contemporary Daphne Mayo (1895-1982), another celebrated Queensland artist and one of the country’s leading sculptors of the twentieth century, also had a Wattle connection.

Educated in Brisbane, Mayo received a Diploma in Art Craftsmanship from the Brisbane Central Technical College in 1913, and during her time at the College, Mayo was influenced by LJ Harvey who initiated her interest in modelling. She further developed her skills when she was presented with an opportunity to go to London in 1919 (her departure from Brisbane being delayed for some years by the First World War) where she was accepted into the Sculpture School of the Royal Academy. Mayo had been awarded the Wattle Day travelling art fellowship in 1914, provided by the Queensland Wattle League.

Mayo can be seen at the (old) Town Hall (illustrated) on Brisbane’s second Wattle Day in July 1914. Mayo is dressed as a wattle maid in the centre foreground. The Mayoress of Brisbane and the Central Committee of the Queensland Wattle Day League accompany her.

Mayo and Lahey were active in Queensland art affairs over a long period, both were involved with the Queensland Art Gallery in various capacities and helped to establish the Queensland Art Fund (founded in 1929) with the aim of acquiring major works for the Gallery’s collection.

Edited curatorial extracts, research and supplementary material sourced and compiled by Elliott Murray, Senior Digital Marketing Officer, QAGOMA

Daphne Mayo as a wattle maid

Daphne Mayo (dressed as a wattle maid, the centre foreground) participating in Wattle Day celebrations in Brisbane, 1914. Mayo was awarded the Wattle Day travelling art fellowship in 1914, provided by the Queensland Wattle League / Courtesy: State Library of Queensland, Brisbane

Brisbane Town Hall

Brisbane’s Old Town Hall, Queen Street, 1930s / Courtesy: Queensland State Archives

Featured image detail: Vida Lahey Wattle in a yellow vase c.1912-15
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How often do you see a five tonne sculpture float down the river?

 

How often does a five metre high, five and a half tonne bronze sculpture, arrive by barge on the Brisbane river with the aim to be lifted by crane on to the back of a truck, just to be slowly driven a few meters into position before being installed by a fearless team?

Well, on Wednesday 14 November 2012 this actually happened. QAGOMA’s major public sculpture The World Turns by international artist Michael Parekowhai was installed on the banks of the Brisbane River outside the Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA). The sculpture was commissioned in 2011 to mark the fifth anniversary of the opening of GOMA and twenty years of ‘The Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art’ (APT).

The World Turns 2011-12 consists of three interrelated life-sized elements cast in bronze: a massive bookend in the form of an Indian elephant tipped on its head; easily overlooked, a kuril, the local native water rat; and a chair, which invites the viewer to sit and contemplate the work. The sculpture’s placement with the spectacular Brisbane skyline in the background adds to the overall appreciation.

Nestled beside GOMA and the State Library of Queensland and easily viewed from the river, you’d be excused for missing the animal encounter on foot, as its not a well-trodden thoroughfare, however its definitely worth the visit next time you are in the Cultural Precinct.

Parekowhai is known for the use of wry humour and his skilful combination of popular culture, art, literature and history. Along with the traditional Aboriginal custodians, the kuril is one of the caretakers of the land upon which the Gallery stands. Here, the kuril is planted firmly on the ground, going about its business grooming its fur, even though the world is upturned from its axis represented by the upturned elephant bookend its positioning referencing the nearby library.

The sculpture reminds us that history is often recorded to highlight specific moments, but, as the world turns, there are many other stories, and these are central to our understanding of history.

RELATED: The World Turns: A Curator’s Perspective

View the onsite installation

Installation of The World Turns 2011-12 / Photographs: N Harth and M Sherwood © QAGOMA

Visit ‘The World Turns’ at GOMA

Michael Parekowhai, Ngāti Whakarongo, New Zealand b.1968 / The World Turns 2011-12 / Bronze / 488 x 456 x 293cm (approx.) / Commissioned 2011 to mark the fifth anniversary of the opening of the Gallery of Modern Art in 2006 and twenty years of The Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art / This project has received financial assistance from the Queensland Government through art+place Queensland Public Art Fund, and from the Queensland Art Gallery Foundation / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Michael Parekowhai / Photographs: N Harth and M Sherwood © QAGOMA

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Martin Boyce re-imagines twentieth-century Modernism

 

A hidden gem on the Kurilpa Lawn outside the western precinct of the Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA), Martin Boyce’s three Cubist inspired trees are nestled within nature waiting to be discovered. Boyce re-imagines twentieth-century Modernism through his sculptures and installations, which rework and give new life to modernist forms of art, architecture and design. Here we delve into We are shipwrecked and landlocked and its original 1925 form.

As the artist stated in a 2005 interview,

‘By and large what you’re looking at is something from the past, but I want to bring it into the now and see what effect time has had.’

We are shipwrecked and landlocked 2008-10 was inspired by a photograph of a group of four concrete Cubist trees designed by French sculptors Joel and Jan Martel in 1925. More than fifteen feet high, each tree had a cruciform trunk supporting quadrangular planes attached vertically and at angles, suggesting foliage. Created for the Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes (International Exhibition of Decorative and Industrial Arts), the Martels’ trees were featured as a collaboration in the Paris garden of influential French architect Robert Mallet-Stevens.

The Martel twins work include ornamental sculptures, statues, monuments and fountains displaying characteristics typical of the Art Deco and Cubist periods. Sharing the same workshop, their jointly created works were co-signed simply Martel.

Jan and Joël Martel ‘Maquette for Arbre Cubiste (Cubist Tree)’ 1925

Jan and Joël Martel, France, 1896–1966 / Maquette for Arbre Cubiste (Cubist Tree) 1925 / Painted wood / 80 x 38.4 x 38.1 cm / Purchase, Gifts of Himan Brown and Adele Simpson, by exchange, 1997 / Collection: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York / © 2020 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Jan and Joël Martel ‘Cubist trees’ 1925

The group of four concrete Cubist trees designed by French sculptors Joel and Jan Martel in 1925 for the Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes, Paris

Cubist trees in the press 1925

Jan and Joël Martel’s Cubist trees were derided in the popular press

Martin Boyce ‘We are shipwrecked and landlocked’ 2008-10

Martin Boyce, United Kingdom b.1967 / We are shipwrecked and landlocked 2008-10 / Polyurethane on aluminium / Three elements: 770cm (high, each) / Gift of Kaldor Public Art Projects (Sydney), the artist and The Modern Institute (Glasgow) with financial assistance from the Queensland Government through Arts Queensland 2010 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / Installed for ’21st Century: Art in the First Decade’ at the Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA) 18 December 2010 – 26 April 2011 / © Martin Boyce

Boyce has commented that the trees ‘represent a perfect collapse of architecture and nature’; they are constructed using industrial materials and based on a form that was, in turn, abstracted from nature.

Boyce has installed versions of the Martels’ trees in a range of environments, including a fifteenth-century Venetian palace and gallery exhibitions in Zurich and Edinburgh. The sculpture at GOMA was originally commissioned by Kaldor Public Art Projects for a square at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology and was subsequently gifted to the Gallery. Estranged from their original 1925 context, the trees are like characters that the artist casts in different locations, each location suggesting a new narrative.

International Exhibition of Decorative and Industrial Arts

The World’s Exposition was held in Paris from April to October 1925, designed by the French government to highlight the new style moderne of architecture, interior decoration, furniture, glass, jewelry and other decorative arts in Europe and throughout the world.

The tallest structure in the Exposition, and one of the most modernist, was the tower of the Tourism Pavilion by Robert Mallet-Stevens, which featured the Martels’ trees. The tower’s sleek lines and lack of ornament stood out above the colorful entrances, sculptural friezes, and murals of ceramics and metal of the other pavilions and was an announcement of the international style that would replace Art Deco.

Edited QAGOMA curatorial extracts, additional research and supplementary material sourced and compiled by Elliott Murray, Senior Digital Marketing Officer, QAGOMA.

International Exhibition of Decorative and Industrial Arts 1925

The Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes, Paris, 1925 with the Tourism Pavilion tower by Robert Mallet-Stevens on right

‘We are shipwrecked and landlocked’ being installed at GOMA

Martin Boyce, United Kingdom b.1967 / We are shipwrecked and landlocked 2008-10 / Polyurethane on aluminium / Three elements: 770cm (high, each) / Gift of Kaldor Public Art Projects (Sydney), the artist and The Modern Institute (Glasgow) with financial assistance from the Queensland Government through Arts Queensland 2010 / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / Installed for ’21st Century: Art in the First Decade’ at the Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA) 18 December 2010 – 26 April 2011 / © Martin Boyce

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