Saturday 29 October 2011

Art Sunday, Sore Throat, an exhibition by Dale Frank




Today I have a cold, a sore throat and a head that feels like cotton wool. Which is why I’m being a little lazy in my Art Sunday post. I usually post a blog but today its easier to put every thing into an album. I found this and thought it appropriate.
This was an exhibition called ‘Sore Throat’: an exhibition of paintings by Dale Frank at the Roslyn Oxley9 gallery in 2007.

The following is the press release, the link to the site and some examples of his work.


Dale Frank - Sore Throat, 2007
View Exhibition Images here
http://www.roslynoxley9.com.au/artists/13/Dale_Frank/553/
PRESS RELEASE
Dale Frank

Sore Throat

Dale Frank’s highly conceptualized abstractions convey an overriding fascination with the inherent plasticity of paint. Seductive poured pockets of varnish are punctuated by creeping, undulating accumulations of colour. These sometimes hallucinatory oscillations typify Frank’s paintings as evidenced in Sore Throat.

Executed without a brush in pure varnish, the beguiling spilling of paint into pooled, organic forms belies Frank’s meticulous choreography of temperature and colour. Both technician and alchemist, Frank’s process is entirely cerebral. He begins by working on a canvas horizontally, pouring successive layers upon the prime surface whilst carefully controlling humidity and density (along with drying and reaction times). The contradictions of movement and stasis are necessary elements of the work’s production; wedges and blocks are placed beneath the paintings and they are repeatedly angled to create desired effects.

Frank creates an exquisite tension between surface, depth and content manifest in his union of abstract paintings with elaborate titles. While their relationship to the paintings may seem ambiguous, they strongly influence the viewer’s response. Frank observes; ‘…People read things into them. There is electricity when they try to connect them to the paintings. You get a current going between the title, the viewer and the work. Sometimes it induces in people associations I would never have dreamed of.’

Serena Bentley

Dale Frank has been showing with Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery since 1982. His career spans more than twenty years. In 1983, he was included in the exhibition Panorama della post - critica: critica ed arte at the Museo Palazzo Lanfranchi in Pisa along with Thomas Lawson and Anselm Kiefer (curated by Helena Kontova). In 1984 he was included in the Aperto section of the Venice Biennale. Returning to Australia, in 1990 he was included in the 8th Biennale of Sydney (curated by Rene Block). A major solo retrospective of his work was held at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney in 2000. His paintings are held in every major public collection in Australia and in numerous private and corporate collections in Australia, Europe and the U.S.. In 2005 Frank won The Arthur Guy Memorial Painting Prize at the Bendigo Art Gallery, Victoria. A major new monograph on Frank’s work will be available in late 2007.

Exhibition opening: Tuesday 28 August, 6 - 8pm
Exhibition dates: 28 August – 22 September, 2007

7 comments:

  1. Hope you feel better soon. I've always liked abstract art or most of it.

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  2. they do look rather mucasy

    but i like them

    :)

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  3. I really like this artist's work!! I'm a big fan of abstract art, and Frank's work really does it for me. I particularly like pics 4 -7. I'd love to view the full-size works sometime.

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  4. Thanks Mitch, I know very little about him except he is Australian and was born in 1959. He is a prolific artists and has had exhibitions in major Australian galleries from the early 80's. I think I'll be looking at his work again.

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  5. Sore throats have never looked better!!! Get well soon Loretta! Don't forget to gargle with salt water!
    :-)

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  6. Wow, what an interesting perspective on art.
    I hope you get better soon.
    ")

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